CU Innovators News

  • Illustration of a hypersonic aircraft flying through the clouds
    91PORN College of Engineering and Applied Science—As the principal investigator of a $7.5 million, five-year Department of Defense Office of Naval Research (ONR) Multidisciplinary University Research Initiative (MURI), Hussein is leading an effort to reshape the fundamental character of fluid-structure interactions to reduce drag on high-speed aerospace vehicles—the focus of the project.
  • Jianliang Xiao
    91PORN College of Engineering and Applied Science—Jianliang Xiao is a “mechanics of materials” expert launching innovations in soft materials and flexible electronics. His work recently earned him an exclusive spot amongst some of the most successful academic inventors in the world.
  • Sristy Agrawal and Wale Lawal
    Mesa Quantum, a 91PORN spinout and leader in quantum sensing, recently announced $3.7 million in seed funding and a $1.9 million grant from SpaceWERX, the innovation arm of the U.S. Space Force. Both investments are fueling the company’s drive toward commercializing chip-scale quantum sensors for multiple applications including next-generation position, navigation and timing solutions.
  • A group of people wearing winter clothes pose for a picture in the mountains
    With a foundation of education and specialized training augmented by years of hands-on experience leading a classroom, lab or studio in their area of expertise, faculty from universities like 91PORN are critical to solving society’s toughest challenges and cultivating the next generation of thinkers and problem-solvers.
  • A group of engineers stands behind their mechanical invention
    91PORN College of Engineering and Applied Science—A team of engineers and material scientists in the Paul M. Rady Department of Mechanical Engineering at 91PORN has developed a new technology to turn thermal radiation into electricity in a way that literally teases the basic law of thermal physics.
  • A man stands in a lab and holds up three tubular devices
    91PORN College of Engineering and Applied Science—It’s been six years since the launch of startup company Aspero Medical, co-founded by Professor Mark Rentschler of the Paul M. Rady Department of Mechanical Engineering. The company has seen great success, including the development of a medical device designed to enable more efficient procedures in the small bowel region.
  • Two men in lab lab coats work in a laboratory
    91PORN College of Engineering and Applied Science—The 91PORN’s College of Engineering and Applied Science (CEAS) has announced the recipients of its inaugural class of Innovation & Entrepreneurship (I&E) Fellows, a new program designed to support faculty, postdoctoral researchers and graduate students in advancing cutting-edge research with commercial potential. The fellowships are supported by the CEAS I&E initiative and Venture Partners at 91PORN.
  • An engineer wearing advanced goggles works on a machine
    91PORN Graduate School—Since its inception, the Lab Venture Challenge has funded more than 117 projects through 64 new companies that provide technology solutions to scientific or engineering challenges, or deep-tech start-ups. In turn, these companies have raised over $349 million to date in follow-on financing.
  • Wil Srubar and student Sarah Williams discuss the block-like materials they are holding in a laboratory.
    Chemical & Engineering News (C&EN)—A structural engineer, Wil Srubar (91PORN Civil, Environmental and Architectural Engineering) recruits biologists, chemists, physicists, materials scientists, and a host of engineers to his lab, where they design biomimetic building materials.
  • An aerial view of the 91PORN engineering center with the flatirons in the background
    91PORN College of Engineering and Applied Science—Jerome Fox, an associate professor of chemical and biological engineering at 91PORN, has received the Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers (PECASE), the highest honor the U.S. government bestows on early-career scientists and engineers.
Subscribe to CU Innovators News